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anaheim-gazette 1885-10-10

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WEEKLY GAZETTE Terms, see Fourth Page. Established 1870. AND JURY REPORT. Any made the following pargal Saturday: and eight true indictments and two informations, seven handed to Your Honor, and we have ignored three cases, where the evidence was not sufficient to convict. We have visited the various county buildings, and find the County Hospital kept in good condition, with ninety-two patients. The expense of the hospital has greatly increased, and we find that no record book is kept separate of said expenses. We recommend hereafter that a record of expenses be kept, and that the poor farm be worked so as to assist in paying a portion of the expenses in conducting the same. The bills also for tobacco and liquor are excessive and not proper charges for a hospital. We find the County Jail is in as good a condition as is possible for its age; the seworage is very imperfect, and the jail is crowded with sixty-two prisoners. We hope for the sake of humanity the Board of Supervisors will soon build a modern jail, where each prisoner will be confined by himself. The Grand Jury believe that jails are built for the repression of crime, and the great evil of our present jail is the indiscriminate intercourse. We believe the prisoners should be worked, as their health would be greatly improved. We have examined the Coroner's books, and find them not kept in good shape. The Here that the Chinese and owners of property themselves, are amenable to the law. And we demand that your handcable Court, through the District Attorney, shall cause the small number of property holders to be dealt with according to law in maintaining so great a nuisance. We call upon the Board of Health and Health Officer of the city to see that the ordinances of the city respecting nuisances are properly enforced in Chinatown before some epidemic is created in our midst. The Grand Jury solemnly protest against the Board of Supervisors subsidizing any county official in the employment of deputies. If any official finds the duties and responsibilities greater than the compensation justices, then he can relieve himself at his option. We earnestly believe that the approaches to the city should receive the personal attention of the Board of Supervisors. We also recommend that the Board of Supervisors examine the County Government Bill, section 25, subdivisions 14 and 12. We also recommend that the County Auditor be required to publish every warrant drawn by him during the month, and include in such publication the moneys received by him; also any and all settlements made with county officials. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. QUINCE SAUCE — One cupful of quince preserves, one of milk, one tablespoonful of corn starch, half a cupful of sugar. Mix the corn starch with a little of the cold milk and put the remainder in the double boiler. When it boils stir in the corn starch and cook ten minutes; then add the sugar and the preserves, mashed fine. Cook ten minutes longer and rub through a strainer. OUR PRUDENCE. The canned fruit yet found no very except in the Europeans in the islands of thage. Here certain kins in a certain fashion highly appreciated, ably and systematically with due regard to thafurnished, would bring there is, however, a from the canned goods Germany, England, Italy which has to be ties and competitive considered. A really was probably never as some may have reached state of preservation. every autumn—and if whence they come—a small hen's egg and well rounded and pared are exposed for sale in Shanghai, or perhaps get so far and advertise as California fruit. But the foreign resident utterly tasteless pea north of China, seem difference. The only kinds of fruit which have attained in the Orient are peanuts. The first are also selected, well prepared whether in canes or boots generally unexceptional the British and French thus usustic. The ap- HOUSEHOLD HINTS. QUINCE SAUCE — One cupful of quince preserves, one of milk, one tablespoonful of corn starch, half a cupful of sugar. Mix the corn starch with a little of the cold milk and put the remainder in the double boiler. When it boils stir in the corn starch and cook ten minutes; then add the sugar and the preserves, mashed fine. Cook ten minutes longer and rub through a strainer. This sauce is usually served cold, but when used with hot pudding it should be hot. WHITE FRUIT CAKE — One cupful of butter, two of sugar, three of flour, the whites of eight eggs, half a wine-glass white wine, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one fourth of a pound of citron cut fine, half a pound of chopped almonds, one teaspoonful of desiccated coconut. Beat the butter to a cream and gradually beat in the sugar and then the wine. Beat the eggs to a stiff froth and stir into the butter and sugar. Add the flour, which is thoroughly mixed with the baking powder, and lastly the fruit. Bake in two loaves forty minutes in a moderate oven. WEDDED PUDDING — One cup sugar, one cup chopped suet, one cup milk, four eggs, one cup bread crumbs, two cups flour, one teaspoonful baking powder, one cup raisins, half a cupition, spices to taste. Put in a butter dish, set this in a pan of boiling water and steam in the oven for two hours. Then make a batter of one pint of milk, one cup of flour and four eggs, yolks and whites beaten separately. Pour it over the fruit pudding and bake forty minutes longer. Serve hot with liquid sauce. APPLE SHORTCAKE — One quart of sifted flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, half a teaspoonful of salt, quarter of a pound of butter, milk or cream enough to make a stiff batter; mix all well, roll in one sheet; bake it well; when done split open, butter well, cover with nicely-seasoned apple sauce; some thick cream and nutmeg; place the other half of the cake on this crust side down, butter the top and spread with more apple sauce and cream. This is delicious either as a pudding or for tea. You may fill shortcake with any kind of fresh fruit, peaches, cherries or berries and filled with well-seasoned chopped chicken it makes a very nice dish. INDIAN WAFFLES — Take a cupful of flour, one of Indian white meal, two of sour milk, one of sour cream, half a teaspoonful of salt, two tablespoonfuls of sugar, one teaspoonful of soda, one tablespoonful of cold water and two eggs. Mix the sugar, salt, meal and flour. Beat the eggs until light. Dissolve the soda in the tablespoonful of cold water and stir it into the sour milk and cream. Pour the liquid upon the dry mixture, then add the beaten eggs and stir well. The only kinds of fruit which have attained in the Orient are pearls. The first are also selected, well prepared whether in canes or boiled generally unexceptional by the British and French thusustatic. The apples liked but are not often green and hard so much to commend them and jellies lack charm not clearly apparent and when competing with similar kind. They are half the price of the goats attempt to compete beetle and they are not well American steamer captain on canned goods are judges of the different reason of this lack be found out and a reminding canning establishment gow and France have the purpose of acquiring juiceference is something always noticed between factory prepared product having or seeming to have concentration, solidity and easy. They are also less pleasant to the eye. The reason on why California jamless toothsome or honest one, and it is not to be beef if the fruit was as conscientiously prepared is certainly no reason wecers, soldiers and color should be willing to pay the same quantity of as in their own country under the difference in quality everywhere an economical disposed to pay more they think it is worth that the brands of any or better than those of any canned fruits except that regarded with similar press the feeling in more of approbation. Still the sold among foreign residing to find their way merchants and mandarin The California canning yet given their attention malades—a form of cane favor in foreign colonies. Those found in China auctioned of the Pacific Mail Company largely in Hongkong, Glasgow. They are certain satisfying and convey the Scottish honesty in the be required to sign their dockets in every case, and plainly state if the prisoner has been found, and the said fine paid, and if partly paid their dockets so to state. The words expressly are merely blank sheets written on by their clerks. The Grand Jury would recommend that the City Court be located at the northern part of the city so that the justices' courts may be more widely apart, and professional jurors can be distributed. We also recommend that the Board of Supervisors see that good and reliable persons are employed in the County Auditor's office, and a bond be required, and also especially that a record be kept of the poll-tax receipts issued. The Grand Jury have examined the new city jail, and find it improperly ventilated and badly planned, and also badly sewered, especially the engine house. We believe a more modern style improvement could have been built for the same amount. We commend hereafter that more competent architects be employed. A subcommittee of the Grand Jury, accompanied by Sheriff Gard, visited that portion of the city commonly called China town, and found a great public nuisance existing in the very center of the city, commencing at the corner of Arecadia and Sanchez streets, and terminating at the corner of Aliso and Los Angeles streets, and extending to the two frontages of the Public Plaza. This Chinatown is a disgrace to the city of Los Angeles. Aspean efforts have been so abate so seriously a nuisance, but no time apparently on no avail. It is a nuisance to the health of the city, and should be dealt with vigorously by the Board of Health and Health officers of the city and county. A white man can be arrested and punished for maintaining a nuisance on his premises. Why can not a Chinaman be arrested and punished for a similar offense? No respect seems to be paid to the law in the above mentioned locality. The most unearthly noises in the evening, the most offensive odors, the accumulated filth, bad sewerage connections, the fire ordinances are violated, and prostitution, opium smoking and gambling are carried on in the above locality. And your Grand Jury firmly be required to sign their dockets in every case, and plainly state if the prisoner has been found, and the said fine paid, and if partly paid their dockets so to state. The words expressly are merely blank sheets written on by their clerks. The Grand Jury would recommend that the City Court be located at the northern part of the city so that the justices' courts may be more widely apart, and professional jurors can be distributed. We also recommend that the Board of Supervisors see that good and reliable persons are employed in the County Auditor's office, and a bond be required, and also especially that a record be kept of the poll-tax receipts issued. The Grand Jury have examined the new city jail, and find it improperly ventilated and badly planned, and also badly sewered, especially the engine house. We believe a more modern style improvement could have been built for the same amount. We commend hereafter that more competent architects be employed. A subcommittee of the Grand Jury, accompanied by Sheriff Gard, visited that portion of the city commonly called China town, and found a great public nuisance existing in the very center of the city, commencing at the corner of Arecadia and Sanchez streets, and terminating at the corner of Aliso and Los Angeles streets, and extending to the two frontages of the Public Plaza. This Chinatown is a disgrace to the city of Los Angeles. Aspean efforts have been so abate so seriously a nuisance, but no time apparently on no avail. It is a nuisance to the health of the city, and should be dealt with vigorously by the Board of Health and Health officers of the city and county. A white man can be arrested and punished for maintaining a nuisance on his premises. Why can not a Chinaman be arrested and punished for a similar offense? No respect seems to be paid to the law in the above mentioned locality. The most unearthly noises in the evening, the most offensive odors, the accumulated filth, bad sewerage connections, the fire ordinances are violated, and prostitution, opium smoking and gambling are carried on in the above locality. And your Grand Jury firmly be required to sign their dockets in every case, and plainly state if the prisoner has been found, and the said fine paid, and if partly paid their dockets so to state. The words expressly are merely blank sheets written on by their clerks. The Grand Jury would recommend that the City Court be located at the northern part of the city so that the justices' courts may be more widely apart, and professional jurors can be distributed. We also recommend that the Board of Supervisors see that good and reliable persons are employed in the County Auditor's office, and a bond be required, and also especially that a record be kept of the poll-tax receipts issued. The Grand Jury have examined the new city jail, and find it improperly ventilated and badly planned, and also badly sewered, especially the engine house. We believe a more modern style improvement could have been built for the same amount. We commend hereafter that more competent architects be employed. A subcommittee of the Grand Jury, accompanied by Sheriff Gard, visited that portion of the city commonly called China town, and found a great public nuisance existing in the very center of the city, commencing at the corner of Arecadia and Sanchez streets, and terminating at the corner of Aliso and Los Angeles streets, and extending to the two frontages of the Public Plaza. This Chinatown is a disgrace to the city of Los Angeles. Aspean efforts have been so abate so seriously a nuisance, but no time apparently on no avail. It is a nuisance to the health of the city, and should be dealt with vigorously by the Board of Health and Health officers of the city and county. A white man can be arrested and punished for maintaining a nuisance on his premises. Why can not a Chinaman be arrested and punished for a similar offense? No respect seems to be paid to the law in the above mentioned locality. The most unearthly noises in the evening, the most offensive odors, the accumulated filth, bad sewerage connections, the fire ordinances are violated, and prostitution, opium smoking and gambling are carried on in the above locality. And your Grand Jury firmly be required to sign their dockets in every case, and plainly state if the prisoner has been found, and the said fine paid, and if partly paid their dockets so to state. The words expressly are merely blank sheets written on by their clerks. INDIAN WAFFLES.—Take a cupful of flour one of Indian white meal, two of sour milk one of sour cream, half a teaspoonful of salt, two tablespoonfuls of sugar, one teaspoonful of soda, one tablespoonful of cold water and two eggs. Mix the sugar, salt meal and flour. Beat the eggs until light. Dissolve the soda in the tablespoonful of cold water and stir it into the sour milk and cream. Pour the liquid upon the dry mixture; then add the beaten eggs and stir well. Have the waffle irons very hot and after rubbing them lightly with a piece of fat pork; pour a thin layer of the batter into one-half of the iron. Drop this other half gently upon first one and then turn 'the iron over. Cook until the waffle is brown on both sides—say about two minutes. OLD MAIDS' PICKLES.—One small head cabbage, cut fine, six large onions sliced, one ear green corn sliced, one dozen green tomatoes sliced, one pint radish pods, green, two ripe cucumbers cut small, two green ones cut small, thirty small green cucumbers used whole; one teaspoonful turmeric; twelve green peppers used whole if small; three cents worth of cloves; one-eighth of a pound ground allspice; one-eighth of a pound mustard seed; one-eighth of a pound pepper corn; one-half pound brown sugar; one quart good cider vinegar; one root of chopped horseradish. Boil the vinegar, sugar, spices and turmeric and pour hot over the pickles; having brought them to a scald in weak vinegar. Famine in Labrador SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 3.—The Call's Ottawa special says it is officially announced here that the Labrador fisheries have proved a failure and that the inhabitants are starving. The suffering of women and children beggars all description, and little ones dying in the arms of their mothers of cold and exposure complete the list of weas. The government has acted with promptness and is hurrying fuel and provisions on board of a steamer which will sail by Monday. Several ships will be necessary to meet the demands as they famine extends along the entire coast. Opea as freely as it is in Alaska would find its way to these rivers when these fruits are canned luxuries that only people can chase and whose supplant ticles prepared in more America ought to be no vexter. There seems to be them our canned fruits in Oregon needs to be intelligently come much more important kong as a distributing power in large quantities to To ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA: SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1885. OUR FRUITS ABROAD. (S. F. Chronicle) The canned fruits of California have as yet found no very extensive market abroad, except in the European colonies in Asia and in the islands of the Australasian archipelago. Here certain kinds of them prepared in a certain fashion are well known and highly appreciated. It is a field which, if ably and systematically worked, and always with due regard to the quality of the goods furnished, would bring back rich returns. There is, however, a very active opposition from the canned goods prepared in France, Germany, England, Scotland and even Italy which has to be met and whose qualities and competitive chances have to be considered. A really good California apple was probably never seen in China, though some may have reached Japan in a tolerable state of preservation. Those that are sent every autumn—and it is impossible to tell whence they come—are about the size of a small hen's egg and as impenetrable on a well rounded and polished pebble. They are exposed for sale in the shop windows of Shanghai, or perhaps of Hong Kong, if they get so far and advertised in staring placards as California fruit. The label is atrocious, but the foreign residents, accustomed to the utterly tasteless pears and apples of the north of China, seem quite unaware of the difference. The only kinds of California canned fruit which have attained any great success in the Orient are peaches, pears and apricots. The first are almost always carefully selected, well prepared and well put up, whether in cans or bottles. The pears are generally unexceptionable and over them the British and French colonies grow enthusiastic. The apoptosis also are much chin China, the Phillipines, Java, Malacca, Siam and India, where they have already found the way. During the late war a portion of the supplies were purchased in San Francisco for the army in Tongquing, where there is still and will continue to be a good market for a superior quality of our canned goods of all descriptions. It only remains for our canners to look well to the quality of the goods they export and to keep competent agents in the field to know the demand and cultivate the trade. EVERYTHING. A great jewel robbery occurred at Glasgow, Scotland, recently, property to the value of $25,000 being stolen. The refusal by a teetotal tailor to make clothes for rumsellers is a new cause for temperance discussion in London. A Dakota farmer claims to have raised seventeen bushels of wheat from on grain of seed in three years. A trade in seagulls has sprung up along the Long Island coast. They are worth fifty cents each for their feathers. It is stated that the average planted to wheat in Southern Illinois this fall will be less than half of last year's area. A diver's day is four hours long and his pay $6; when he furnishes all his own apparatus the prizes runs from $30 to $50 a day. At a fire in Portland, Or., on Monday Mrs. Hoeff was so severely burned before she could escape from the building that she died in a few hours. Illegitimate births are steadily on the increase in France, the figures being 68,227 in CHICAGO MARKET FOR WINE GRAPES. The San Bernardino Kader publishes a letter from Hixon, Jeatns & Co. of Chicago to the Hon. Anson Van Leuven of Old San Bernardine, stating that they are satisfied that they can do better with wine grapes in Chicago than they can do here. Following is the extract: "Should you or any of your neighbors dry any instead of putting them up in large boxes as has been the case for the San Francisco market, we would advise them being packed the same as the twenty-pound raisin box. It was only this week that we commenced to agitate the matter of shipping grapes here for wine, and we have already secured enough parties to take six carloads at $80 per ton, provided they arrive here sound—that is, not rotten. If they should be leaking some it would not condemn them, provided they were not mouldy or musty. We have talked to the railroads in reference to this matter and expected an answer by today so that we could write to you just what could be done, but they say they cannot give us a definite answer to our demands until Monday. The point we are trying to make with them is to get them to give us a reasonable assurance that the cars will come through in seven days or less and give a weight here on the net grapes without the boxes. But take it for granted that we can do nothing better than what they are doing for all shippers, we believe that we can show you by figures that it will be to your interest to ship in a green state. At $80 per ton is four cents a pound; put the freight at $1.50 per hundred by fast freight; it would require three boxes at eight cents apiece to hold 100 pounds of grapes which is 24 cents. Say that the local freight to as California fruit. The libel is attrocious, but the foreign residents, accustomed to the utterly tasteless pears and apples of the north of China, seem quite unaware of the difference. The only kinds of California canned fruit which have attained any great success in the Orient are peaches, pears and apricots. The first are almost always carefully selected, well prepared and well put up, whether in cases or bottles. The pears are generally unexceptionable and over them the British and French colonies grow enthusiastic. The apricots also are much liked but are not so well selected, being often green and hard. The plums have not so much to command them, and the jams and jellies lack character for some reason not clearly apparent and have little chance when competing with European goods of similar kind. They are rebuilt at about half the price of the goods with which they attempt to compete; but their sale is slow and they are not well spoken of even by American steamer captains who, living much on canned goods, are supposed to be good judges of the different kinds and qualities. The reason of this lack of character should be found out and a remedy applied, even if the canning establishments of London, Glasgow and France have to be visited for the purpose of acquiring information. The difference is something akin to that which is always noticed between home-prepared and factory-prepared products, the first always having or seeming to have more taste, concentration, solidity and more apparent honesty. They are also less "mushy" and unpleasant to the eye. There is no good reason why California jams and jellies should be less toothsome or honest than those of Europe, and it is not to be supposed they would be if the fruit was as well selected and as conscientiously prepared for market. There is certainly no reason why the French officers, soldiers and colonists in Touquin should be willing to pay twice the price for the same quantity of a similar article made in their own country unless there was twice the difference in quality. The French are everywhere an economical people and not disposed to pay more for an article than they think it is worth. It does not appear that the brands of any one establishment are better than those of another, all California canned fruits, except those specified, being regarded with similar disfavor or, to express the feeling in more exact terms, want of approbation. Still they are considerably sold among foreign residents and are beginning to find their way among the Chinese merchants and mandarins. The California canning firms have not as yet given their attention very much to materials—a form of canned fruit in great favor in foreign colonies and on shipboard. Those found in China and on the steamers of the Pacific Mail Company, who purchase largely in Hongkong, come chiefly from Glasgow. They are certainly excellent and satisfying and convey the idea of a genuine Scotch honey in their preparation. It is stated that the acreage planted to wheat in Southern Illinois this fall will be less than half of last year's area. A diver's day is four hours long and his pay $6; when he furnishes all his own apparatus the price runs from $30 to $50 a day. At a fire in Portland, Or., on Monday Mrs. Hoeff was so severely burned before she could escape from the building that she died in a few hours. Illegitimate births are steadily on the increase in France, the figures being 68,227 in 1880, 70,079 in 1881, 71,305 in 1882, 74,213 in 1883 and 75,754 in 1884. Franklin J. Moses, ex-Governor of South Carolina, was sentenced last week to three years' imprisonment in the Massachusetts State Prison for obtaining money under false pretenses. It is said that glass articles which have held milk ought not to be put into hot water at once, as this causes the milk to penetrate the glass, giving it a cloudy appearance which can never be wholly removed. Fort Lewis, in La Plata county, Col., is said to be the highest military post in the world, being 8,500 feet above sea level. At present there are six companies of infantry and two companies of cavalry with twenty-one officers stationed there. Queen Victoria is said to have made a new will, leaving the Isle of Wight property to Connaught, the Scottish property to Beatrie, and handsome provision for the children of Leopold. Her entire fortune is estimated at about $35,000,000. William Van Tassel of Tarrytown, N.Y., was shot in the arm last fall and mortification setting in, the doctors gave him up, as he was too weak to submit to amputation. His arm came off; however, without saw or knife, and the stump healed and he is as well as ever. A new sugar is now obtained from the seeds of Laurus Pyrus, a tree growing in the tropics. This sugar tree has, on previous occasions, been noticed by chemists, but was supposed by them to be mannish. It is extracted by boiling alcohol, from which it crystallizes on cooling. Many thousands of tons of cotton-seed, once considered valueless, are now sold for $10 to $2 per ton. In seven months ending last August, $1,828,771 worth of cotton-seed oil was exported to Europe from the Southern States, or about twice as much as during the same period of last year. A cheese dealer states that much of the so-called English cheese is made in this country and shipped to England, whence it is returned, enhanced in value by the sea voyage. Sometimes cheeses are shipped backward and forward two or three times each voyage adding to the richness of their flavor. make with them is to get them to give us a reasonable assurance that the cars will come through in seven days or less and give a weight here on the net grapes without the boxes. But take it for granted that we can do nothing better than what they are doing for all shippers; we believe that we can show you by figures that it will be to your interest to ship in a green state. At $89 per ton is four cents a pound; put the freight at $150 per hundred by fast freight; it would require three boxes at eight cents apiece to hold 100 pounds of grapes which is 24 cents. Say that the local freight to the terminal point (Los Angeles) would be fifteen cents per hundred; the extra care of boxing to ship, over what it would require to haul to the winery there would be 15 cents per hundred; drayage on this side five cents; commission, if sold at four cents a pound, 40; the whole amount would be $249; deduct that from $400 and we have $130 per hundred pounds for the grapes. Would you decide to ship I would recommend a shallow box, any size in length or width but not to exceed five inches in depth, with a number of holes bored in the sides. There would be no necessity of putting covers on them, but when packing in the car lay a strip one inch thick on each end of the top of the box so that when the next box is set on top it will not mash the grapes and at the same time give ventilation, as the main thing for getting fruit through in proper condition is to have it well ventilated. We have no doubt but that if your grapes are properly handled they will stand seven days to this point without any material damage. You ought to pick them before they are too ripe; before they show signs of softening and handle them with care because when a grape is mashed it soon commences to decay and decays those immediately around it." [It is possible that one reason why Chicago wine-makers can afford to pay $80 per ton for grapes is that wine made on the Chicago plan is based on one grape to a gallon of water. Grapes are not a necessity in wine-making in some places—Ed. Gazette.] Still they are considerably sold among foreign residents and are beginning to find their way among the Chinese merchants and mandarins. The California canning firms have not yet given their attention very much to marmalades—a form of canned fruit in great favor in foreign colonies and on shipboard. Those found in China and on the steamers of the Pacific Mail Company, who purchase largely in Hongkong, come chiefly from Glasgow. They are certainly excellent and satisfying and convey the idea of a genuine Scotch honesty in their preparation. It seems a little singular that London or Glasgow firms are able to import oranges from Spain, Portugal, Sicily, Malta or the West Indies and make them into a confection and send them to the Pacific, and still more peculiar that a Californian, fresh from his own abundance and varieties of fruit, should find them on the table of the steamer before he is out of sight of the Golden Gate. California oranges would certainly make excellent marmalades but it would be quite useless to prepare and export them unless they were equal in quality to those already in the market. Apples might be used for the same purpose, especially those kinds too hard and strongly flavored for the table. It is a matter of surprise to one knowing the general scarcity of fruit in Europe that so much can be canned and exported. It is because of the economy of the fruit raisers who are generally poor and must utilize every possible means of income. They deprive themselves of the commonest of little luxuries and delicacies that they may exchange them for the actual necessaries of life. Were fruit eaten by all classes in Europe as freely as it is in America very little would find its way to the local markets, to say nothing of a surplus for exportation. When these fruits are canned they become luxuries that only people of means can purchase and whose supplanting by similar articles prepared in the more fruitful parts of America ought to be no very difficult matter. There seems to be then a good market for our canned fruits in China, which only needs to be intelligently supplied to become much more important. From Hong-kong as a distributing point they would go in large quantities to Tonquio, Anam, Co- GAZETTE. ER 10, 1885. NO. 1. F. H. KEITH, REAL ESTATE AGENT. Live Stock Bought and Sold on Commission. ANAHEIM. J. H. BULLARD, A.B., M.D. Physician and Surgeon. Office and Drug Store on Los Angeles St. East of Planters' Hotel. OFFICE HOURS: 8 to 9:30 A.M.; 1:30 to 2:30, and 7 to 8 P.M. DR. E. L. COWAN, DENTIST, Will be in his Anaheim office on Thursday, Friday and Saturday of each week. We Have Just Received a Carload of FURNITURE! Direct from Eastern Factories. Latest Styles at prices lower than in Los Angeles. Call and examine for yourselves. LUMBER YARD PLANING, SAWING AND MOULDING MILLS. OF Saxton & Cox, Anaheim. NEAR THE RAILROAD DEPOT All Varieties of Pine, Redwood, and Sour LUMBER! Doors, Sashes, and Blinds, Grape Boxes, Boxes, Bee-Hives, and Fruit Dryers. Builders' Hardware and Nails Plain and Fancy SCROLL SAWING in short notle We Have Just Received a Carload of FURNITURE! Direct from Eastern Factories. Latest Styles at prices lower than in Los Angeles. Call and examine for yourselves. F & J. BACKS H. C. KELLOGG. Civil Engineer and Surveyor. (Deputy County Surveyor.) VICTOR MONTGOMERY, Attorney-at-Law, SANTA ANA, CAL. Rooms 4 and 5, Commercial Bank building. Office hours from 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. RICHARD MELROSE, NOTARY PUBLIC GAZETTE OFFICE. L. GUNTHER. Pioneer Boot and Shoe Maker, Cor. Adelaide and Los Angeles streets. ANAHEIM. GEORGE BAUER, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER, Center Street. MAKING AND REMAINING AT THE LOWEST cash price. All orders promptly attended to. All work guaranteed. WM. R. HARKER, SADDLE & HARNESS MAKER, CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM. S. A. DENNIS, Carriage and Sign Painter, Center Street, Anaheim, OFFERS AS REFERENCES THE NUMEROUS wagons and signs painted by him in Anaheim. PRICES REASONABLE. The patronage of the public respectfully solicited mayd. BUY THE R.E. SWEET Pickled Ham. The Best and Cheapest in the NEAR THE RAILROAD DEPOT All Varieties of Pine, Redwood, and Shrub LUMBER! Doors, Sashes, and Blinds, Grape Boxes, Boxes, Bee-Hives, and Fruit Dryers. Builders' Hardware and Nails Plain and Fancy SCROLL SAWING in short notice Anaheim Crist Mill! Grain, Feed, Meal, etc., of all Variety CORN SHELLED AND SHIPPED ANAHEIM STORAGE WAREHOUSE GRAIN, WOOL, AND GENERAL MERCHANDISE TAKEN ON STORAGE GRAIN SACKS and TWINE constantly on hand CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED Of all kinds of PRODUCE. Advances made, MERCHANTISE forwarded and sold on Commission in best Markets. A. E. WHITE. E. A. WHITE BLACKSMITHING —AND— Wagonmaking! All Work Warranted. Prices as low as the lowest Los Angeles Street, Anaheim, City Stables, Center Street (Opposite Kroeger's Block) ANAHEIM. L. F. Lewis. -- Proprietor. THESE STABLES ARE THE BEST VENTILATED and most commodious in the town, and special at Station will be paid by Boarding and Grooming horses. The charge in all cases will be reasonable. Single and Double Teams Furnished at short notice, and careful drivers, familied with the country, supplied when required. The manage of the public is respectfully solicited. COOPERAGE BUY THE R.E. SWEET Pickled Ham. The Best and Cheapest in the Market. Casks, Pipes AND PUNCHEONS IN PERFECT ORDER For Sale at Low Prices. E. DREYFUS & CO., Anaheim. GENERAL AGENTS WANTED Of extra ability and experience, to take general appointing agencies, to find and start other convassers on fast-selling books. Extraordinary indictments. Applicants must show they mean business by stating by letter (no postal cards) in full their experience, etc. 201 N. Second St., St. Louis, Mo. Cigars and Tobacco. THE UNDERSIONED KEEPS ALL GRADES OF cigars, cigarettes and tobacco, and invites a trial of the brands continually in stock. Every new brand of merit is promptly procured and sold at the lowest possible rates. Subscriptions received for all newspapers and periodicals. E.F. NEWBOLD, Center street. Many a Lady is beautiful, all but her skin; and nobody has ever told her how easy it is to put beauty on the skin. Beauty on the skin is Magnolia Balm. MONEY Made easily in a pleasant business. Send 8 cents for all necessary information and articles to go to work with. Don't miss this chance. P. V. Johnson, Shirts, Ohio.